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A guide to ramen for the home cook, from the chef behind the beloved shop Otaku Ramen.Sarah Gavigan is otaku. Loosely translated, she's a ramen geek. During her twenty years working in film production and as a music executive in L.A., Gavigan ate her way through the local ramen spots, but upon moving back to her native Nashville, she found she missed the steaming bowls of ramen she used to devour. So she dedicated herself to mastering the oft-secretive but always delicious art of ramen-making and opened her own shop within a few years.An Italian American born and raised in the South, Gavigan is an unlikely otaku. While her knowledge of ramen is rooted in tradition, her methods and philosophies are modern. Though ramen is often shrouded in mystery, Gavigan's 40+ recipes are accessible to the home cook who wants to learn about the cuisine but would sometimes rather make a quick stock in a pressure cooker than labor over a vat of liquid for twenty-four hours.Ramen Otaku strips the mystique from ramen while embracing its history, magic, and rightful place in the American home kitchen.



About the Author

Sarah Gavigan

In the summer of 2012, Sarah Gavigan returned to her native Tennessee after almost 20 years in Los Angeles and found that Nashville was ramen-less.Gavigan lasted two ramen-less years before she decided to dedicate herself to learning the craft of making traditional ramen. While helping a local Nashville chef in his garden one day, she discovered that the Japanese aromatic Shiso grew wild in Middle Tennessee. Surprised, she dug deeper and found that Nashville sits on almost the exact same latitude as Tokyo, yielding many of the same vegetables and similar flavors. Middle Tennessee is renowned for its prized country ham, and heritage pigs meant there were hundreds of local farms able to provide bones, which are necessary to make succulent TN Tonkotsu (pork bone) ramen broth. It all made perfect sense.After testing recipes with friends, she started doing pop-ups all over town with great success. Finally, in 2014 Gavigan and her husband Brad opened POP Nashville, which housed Otaku South until May 2015 when construction began on OTAKU RAMEN. In December of 2015 OTAKU RAMEN opened in the Gulch neighborhood of Nashville.Gavigan's menu for the shop is focused on ramen made using traditional techniques taught to her by mentor and Chef, Shigetoshi Nakamura, using the styles of ramen she loves.Chef Gavigan's first cookbook, RAMEN OTAKU, which features more than 40 recipes for the ramen-obsessed home cook, will be released by Avery Books on November 13, 2018. Copies of the book are available for pre-order now at Amazon, Books A Million, Barnes & Noble, Hudson Booksellers, IndieBound, Powell's, Target and Walmart.



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